2017-10-23 |
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Bad News for Bees as Honey Crop Remains Depressingly Small
The country’s honey crop remains depressingly small, just 24 lbs or approaching 11 kilos per beekeeper, pointing to a steady decline in the crop and an increase in worries about the future of honey bees.
The results of the British Beekeepers Association’s annual Honey Survey reveals that the average beekeeper in England produced 23.8 lbs (11.8 kilos) of honey this year – a decrease of 2.3 lbs over last year’s crop.
Honey bee feeding on a forget-me-not
The two most productive regions in England continue to be the South East, producing 30.1 lbs of honey and the East with 29.3 lbs of honey per hive, while those areas which suffered a particularly wet summer, Wales and the South West, both saw their honey crop drop to 18 lbs per hive.
Britain differs from the rest of Europe in that most of its beekeeping is carried out by amateur beekeepers, whereas in much of the rest of Europe it is carried out by bee farmers. In common with the EU as whole, Britain does not produce enough honey to meet demand.
“A honey crop of fifty to a hundred pounds was typical when I started beekeeping in the 1950’s,” said John Hobrough who was recently awarded his BBKA certificate for sixty years of beekeeping and is the BBKA’s Adopt a Beehive representative for the North East region.
He continues:
“In those days farmers under-planted crops with clover
to nourish the land, nowadays there just isn’t time or space for
this style of farming. I think it is having a huge impact on the
honey crop, by reducing the forage available not just to honey
bees, but all our insects.
“I warn new beekeepers not to expect a big crop of honey, and to be fair many people aren’t in it nowadays for the honey.”
While weather conditions will always cause variations in the honey crop, for example the cold winter of 2014 saw the honey crop drop to just 8lb a colony, it is the steady overall decline in quantity which is worrying.
The top five factors worrying beekeepers about the future of the honey bees are:
Beekeepers gave more than one answer so, figures adds up to more than 100
Margaret Murdin, BBKA Chairman, concludes:
“Everyone can play a
part in helping honey bees and all the other insects they love such
as butterflies and bumble bees by planting the right sort of flowers
and shrubs. Check the label to see that anything you plant will
be rich in nectar and pollen, as not all plants are equal in this
respect. A crocus is so much better for bees than a daffodil, for
example.
“Our survey shows that suburban gardens and urban roof tops produce some of the best honey crops, so how we garden really can make a difference.”